Showing posts with label 1950. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1950. Show all posts

16 September 2020

Finally, The Bear Begins (No, Really)

Okay, let's try this once again, eh? 
We're talking about the odd origins of The Bear as a feature in Treasure Chest Of Fun & Fact.

One of the things that was quite unusual about the beginnings of the Bear is that he started as a text feature. And that's how he appeared for his first few years. The Grand Comics Database will tell you that The Bear first appeared in the latter half of volume 5, but that's not accurate. He had his premiere tale late in v.4 -


As you may have noticed, though Postal Regulations only require two pages of text, TC0F&F actually used those pages for more than mere filler and decided they needed three pages every issue.
 
The Bear had several tales in text form before he graduated to comics...
 







The most indicative of his popularity was El Vaquero -
 

This one would seem to show that these stories were quite popular indeed. And not simply because they promoted him from required filler text to comic stories.
After all - when's the last time you saw a comic's text pages take the cover of the book?


That's pretty freakin' amazing, as the saying goes.

Another odd little note - While the comics stories are written by Eric St. Clair, he used the name Ray St. Clair while doing the text stories. 

pages from Treasure Chest Of Fun & Fact v4 #18, v5 #s 12 & 18, v6 #s 10 & 17, v7 #12, v8 #s 7 & 14, and v9 #1 (1946-1951)

24 August 2020

In The Days Before Ken Jennings

It'll come as no surprise that a lot of my favorite books and movies as a youngling were about oddballs and outsiders. I ran into one of those old faves while poking through some comics this morning in an old issue of Hollywood Film Stories from 1950. It's one of those movies that i really loved as a kid, but that nobody else i knew seemed to have ever heard of - Champagne For Caesar. It's not like it was a back lot one-reeler with no distribution and no stars. Ronald Colman was tolerably Huge, and Vincent Price - n'uff said? Celeste Holm playing leading lady opposite Colman, and Barbara Britton rounding out a nice foursome.

Beauregard Bottomly, our hero, is a bit of a social misfit who feels abused by a corporation and finds a unique way to take his revenge on the company via the gameshow they sponsor. Burnbridge Waters (don't you love the names in this script?) is the esoteric chairman of Milady Soap company, the Soap That Sanctifies, to be sure that cleanliness is next to Godliness.

It's a fun little romp in a twisted little corner of Hollywood, and it's all broken down for us in eight pages...




And even a believable conclusion.

Now i'm in the mood for some more old movies. I'll have to go digging through the video closet. But not today.

Today i've already got 007: From Beijing With Love lined up.


no page art, just pages from Hollywood Film Stories #5 (1950)

03 May 2020

Safety Sunday! (or The Captain Was A Lieutenant (There Can Be Only One))

I do believe we're overdue for an Un-Comic; it's been a fair bit.

For the unfamiliar, Un-Comics is what we call comics that didn't appear in standard comic books. They may have appeared in magazines, books, industry publications, etc.,.

Today, we've got a major comics star doing some public service work - Captain Marvel and the Lieutenants Of Safety. (actually written by Otto Binder and drawn by C.C. Beck!) versus Demon Danger and the terrible hazards of Kite Flying -



Don't you feel safer now?

There were three of these public service comics published in 1950. Next times, the deadly dangers of Climbing and Darkness!

Be good, stay safe, and take your meds -


page art by C.C. Beck from Captain Marvel And The Lieutenants Of Safety #1 (1950)

27 March 2020

Found In Space

I didn't make it to bed last night until the sun showed up. So running a wee bit behind today. Instead of rooting around for a new topic, let's just follow along with yesterday's space journey. Lots of old Golden Age heroes hopped off the planet now and again.

Even some you might never suspect - like the Black Pirate...



And then there's Batman. No surprise he left the planet. He even left the millennium. 
Batman Is Everywhere!


Too bad he didn't send them to the year 3000 to hook up with the Batman we met there three years prior to this tale.

Now, if you'll excuse me, i'm going to go caffeinate.

page art by Paul Reinman from All-American Comics #83 and Bob Kane, Lew Sayre Schwartz, and Charles Paris from Batman #59 (1947, 1950)